Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad is a powerful modernist novella that explores imperialism, moral corruption, psychological darkness, and the fragile boundary between civilization and savagery. The story follows Charles Marlow, a sailor who travels into the Congo Free State to find the mysterious ivory trader Kurtz, a man whose reputation for brilliance hides a terrifying descent into brutality and obsession. As Marlow moves deeper into the African interior, the journey becomes both a physical expedition and a symbolic descent into the hidden violence of empire and the human soul.
Through dense, atmospheric prose and layered narration, the novella examines the hypocrisy of European colonial ideals, exposing how claims of progress and civilization can mask greed, exploitation, racism, and destruction. Kurtz becomes a disturbing figure of unchecked power, showing what can happen when ambition, isolation, and absolute authority are freed from moral restraint. The river journey, the oppressive landscape, and the growing sense of uncertainty create a haunting meditation on guilt, illusion, truth, and the darkness within humanity.
More than an adventure tale, Heart of Darkness is a complex literary work about power, conscience, and the collapse of moral certainty. Its ambiguity, symbolism, and psychological intensity have made it one of the most discussed works in English literature, admired for its narrative innovation while also debated for its portrayal of Africa and colonial subjects. It remains an essential classic for readers interested in modernism, colonial critique, symbolic fiction, and the disturbing realities behind imperial conquest.












Jeppe
27.10.2020
Uinteressant
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